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Obama aims convention at blue-collar voters

On the eve of the Democratic National Convention,
Barack Obama said Sunday he hoped a week of political speechmaking
would persuade reluctant middle-class voters to swing behind his
bid for the White House, while Republicans sought to stir
discontent among Hillary Rodham Clinton's supporters.
Clinton was having none of it. In a gesture of unity, Obama's
rival in the bruising battle for the nomination was expected to
release the delegates she won in primaries and caucuses, telling
them in midweek they are now free to join her in supporting the
victor.

Obama, bidding to become the first black president, campaigned
through swing-state Wisconsin, then flew home to Chicago to work on
the acceptance speech he will deliver before 75,000 partisans on
the convention's closing night.

Previewing the week ahead, he said he hoped convention viewers
would conclude, "He's sort of like us. He comes from a
middle-class background, went to school on scholarships. He and his
wife had to figure out child care and how to start a college fund
for their kids."'

Clinton outpolled Obama among working-class voters in many
states through the winter and spring, and Sen. John McCain and the
Republicans have worked relentlessly in more recent weeks to depict
the Illinois senator as an elitist who is out of touch with
blue-collar concerns.

With Democrats descending on their highly fortified convention
city, party officials worked energetically to assure a harmonious
week.

And on a unanimous vote, the party's credentials committee
restored full voting rights to delegations from Florida and
Michigan. Both states were stripped of their voting rights earlier
in the year in retaliation for holding primaries before party rules
allowed.

"The only way we will be successful is if we are unified as a
party and all Democrats know we are full partners," said Chris
Edley Jr., a member of the panel.

The Democrats were meeting with public opinion polls giving
Obama a modest advantage at best in the race to become the nation's
44th president. McCain has been on the political offense in recent
weeks, and he has successfully cut into what had been a slightly
more comfortable lead for the Democrat.

If Democratic unity was uppermost in the minds of Obama's aides,
McCain had other ideas.

The Republican presidential contender's campaign readied a
television commercial - there was no immediate evidence it had been
broadcast - suggesting Obama had snubbed Clinton when he picked
Delaware Sen. Joseph Biden as his vice presidential running mate.

"She won millions of votes but isn't on the ticket. Why? For
speaking the truth," says the ad, which also shows Clinton
criticizing Obama during their protracted battle for the Democratic
presidential nomination.

The former first lady has praised Biden's selection. In response
to the ad, spokeswoman Kathleen Strand noted that Clinton "has
said repeatedly that Barack Obama and she share a commitment to
changing the direction of the country, getting us out of Iraq and
expanding access to health care. John McCain doesn't. It's
interesting how those remarks didn't make it into his ad."

The first arrests of the convention week were reported when
about 1,000 anti-war demonstrators marched through downtown under
the watchful eye of police in riot-control gear. Officials did not
immediately provide details on the number of those taken into
custody, or even confirm that those arrested had taken part in the
march.

Inside the Pepsi Center, where the convention's opening gavel
falls on Monday, the floor seating was rearranged to reflect a new
political order. Delaware's delegates were granted a spot closer to
the front, an upgrade resulting from Biden's selection as Obama's
vice presidential running mate.

With McCain trying to use Clinton to divide the Democrats, Obama
strongly defended his vice presidential choice, a selection that
seemed designed to fill a gap in his own foreign policy resume
while appealing to blue-collar voters.

"He's got the passion to lift up middle-class Americans, he
hasn't forgotten his working-class roots, he has the expertise that
will make him a great counselor on international crises that might
come up," Obama told reporters before boarding his plane in Eau
Claire, Wis.

The opening night convention program - featuring an appearance
by Michelle Obama - was scripted to reach out to the same segment
of the electorate. Officials said her remarks would present her
husband - the son of a white mother from Kansas and a black father
from Kenya who later left the family - as anything but elite.

Barack Obama's half-sister, Maya Soetoro-Ng, and Michelle
Obama's older brother, Craig Robinson, also will have roles in the
convention.

Clinton's address is the centerpiece of Tuesday's session, and
given her appeal during the primaries, her remarks could prove
pivotal to Obama's chances of success in the fall. A recent
NBC-Wall Street Journal poll made clear how much work Obama has yet
to do to appeal to her voters.

The survey indicated that only half of those who voted for
Clinton are now supporting Obama, while about 20 percent are
backing McCain.

Mindful of that, Obama agreed to allow Clinton's name to be
placed in nomination on Wednesday night. The move may well reassure
her supporters, but it risks at least the appearance of a divided
party to viewers watching the proceedings at home on television.

Clinton's spokesman, Philippe Reines, said her meeting with her
delegates this week will be an opportunity to "thank them for
their hard work and support, and most importantly to encourage them
to support and work for Senator Obama as strongly as she has in
order to elect him in November."

Biden spent the day at home in Delaware after Saturday's
campaign debut with Obama in Illinois.

Spokesman David Wade said the senator would remain on the ballot
for a new Senate term this fall while running for national office.
If Obama wins the White House, Biden would resign from Congress to
become vice president, and the governor of Delaware would appoint a
temporary replacement.